• Sept. 8, 11:30 p.m.: Kenneka Jenkins leaves her West Side home in her mother’s car with friends. At first they plan to go to a movie, but instead decide to head to the Crowne Plaza Chicago O'Hare Hotel & Conference Center in Rosemont to attend another friend’s birthday party. On the way to the hotel, they stop to pick up a Bluetooth speaker, a bottle of Hennessy Cognac, some energy drink and some marijuana, the friends later told police.

• Sept. 9, 1:13 a.m.: Jenkins enters the hotel with three other females.

• Sept. 9, approximately 1:30 a.m.: Jenkins sends a text message to her sister, according to police reports. The family says that’s the last time they hear from her directly.

• Sept. 9, 1:36 a.m.: A Facebook live video appears to show the party in a ninth-floor hotel room. The video, now viewed by millions, features a woman in mirrored sunglasses talking to the camera. Reflected in her glasses is the other side of the hotel room, where Jenkins appears to be sitting.

• Sept. 9, 2:17 a.m.: Jenkins posts a Snapchat video that appears to show her in a hotel bathroom, according to what her sister told police. Friends say there were about 30 people at the party and that Jenkins spent the time talking with friends, drinking and dancing.

• Sept. 9, around 3 a.m.: As friends prepare to leave the party, Jenkins realizes she’s missing some belongings, including her phone. She stands in the hallway by a ninth-floor elevator while her friends go back to the room to look for her belongings, according to a police report. A friend said it took about 10 or 15 minutes; when they returned to the hallway, Jenkins was gone.

• Sept. 9, 3:25 to 3:32 a.m.: Surveillance video, which wouldn’t be seen until hours later, shows Jenkins staggering around the hotel by herself, bumping into walls and a stair railing. She lurches through an empty kitchen, disappears around a corner is never seen alive again. Investigators later learn the door to the freezer in which Jenkins was found — actually a freezer within a walk-in cooler — shuts automatically but, from the inside, the door latch can be activated by pushing a white, circular handle.

• Sept. 9, about 4 a.m.: Jenkins’ friend calls her mother to ask if she’s arrived home and let her know Jenkins cannot be found at the hotel.

• Sept. 9, about 5 a.m.: Jenkins’ friends return to her mother’s home with her mother’s car, according to a police report. Friends tell the family they lost Jenkins at the hotel and left after searching for her.

• Sept. 9, about 7:15 a.m.: Jenkins’ mother, Tereasa Martin, calls Rosemont police from the parking lot. By now she and other relatives and friends have been at the hotel for at least an hour, seeking answers about Jenkins. During the call, the dispatcher suggests to Martin that she wait a couple of hours, go home and relax and see if her daughter shows up, and advises her to come back to police if there’s no sign of her. Martin expresses her concerns that her daughter has been drinking. She also asks why her daughter would leave her cellphone behind if she’s OK.

Advance to 1:00 and watch Greer place the gun in his left with both hands off the wheel. He turns around the first time only after he secures the gun and after his right hand returned to the wheel. Watch the cartoon of the driver shooting back on the passenger's head.

Another persistent belief is that American officials were somehow involved. One theory is that the fatal bullet actually came from the driver of Kennedy’s own car as he attempted to fire upon Oswald.

“If you look at a really bad copy of the Zapruder film, it will look like William Greer, the driver, reached over his shoulder with a gun and shot Kennedy in the head,” John McAdams, author of “JFK Assassination Logic: How to Think about Claims of Conspiracy,” told The Daily Beast. “But his hands were on the steering wheel the whole time, it only looks differently in a very bad copy of the Zapruder film.”

Denial of fact

In this form of denial, someone avoids a fact by utilizing deception. This lying can take the form of an outright falsehood (commission), leaving out certain details to tailor a story (omission), or by falsely agreeing to something (assent). Someone who is in denial of fact is typically using lies to avoid facts they think may be painful to themselves or others.

"Cell phones keep sending a signal several times a minute even though they are turned off. The only way to stop the GPS signal from a cell phone is to take out the battery, which is nearly imp

Not sure what part of this question is the actual question.

Cops track people all the time, for various reasons, especially people involved with drugs. I doubt they use insurance devices, though, but they could, if they got a warrant. As far as I know they install their own device.

The story is that Toni was pulled over a lot. It sounds to me like it's probably a combination of bad driving and the time she's on the road. But she may have been baffled as to why she got pulled over so much and blamed in on the insurance tracking device.

It's just a theory. She was pulled over. Immediately after she unplugged her device. They seem connected.

We know that she voluntarily did quite a few unexplained things. Drove right past where she was supposed to go. Went to a strange location. Got pulled over. Pulled her insurance tracker. Couldn't get her card to work. Typed 'just' twice.

I was just at the QuikTrip at 26th and Burlington and I noticed that they have cameras around the whole building including the backside of the building. I've got to think the police department have reviewed those videos and if they haven't then why didn't they.

"But I do know that when she started her car the GPS is no longer transmitting on her car," said Sgt. Caldwell.

And as Toni leaves the gas station to get back on the highway known as the Route 9 Corridor, you can see the cop who'd pulled her over continue to follow her until she is out of view of surveillance cameras.

"There is no visual evidence to show where she went," said Sgt. Caldwell.